Isaiah 26:14

They are dead, they shall not live; they are deceased, they shall not rise: therefore hast thou visited and destroyed them, and made all their memory to perish.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 26:19 promises resurrection for God's people — directly contrasting the enemies' fate of no resurrection in 26:14.

Isaiah 14:19-22 describes the king of Babylon cast out, his memory perishing — a very close parallel to the dead who shall not rise.

Psalm 9:6 Parallel

Psalm 9:6 says the enemy's memorial has perished — a direct parallel to making all memory perish in judgment.

Revelation 19:19-21 depicts the beast and kings slain — the final destruction of God's enemies, echoing the dead who shall not rise.

Job 24:20 Parallel

Job 24:20 describes the wicked forgotten and consumed by worms — directly parallels the erased remembrance of enemies here.

Ecclesiastes 9:5 states the dead are forgotten — mirrors the wiped-out remembrance of the wicked here.

Exodus 14:30 Historical context

Exodus 14:30 shows the Egyptians dead on the seashore — a historical instance of God destroying enemies whose memory perishes.

Psalm 109:13 asks for the wicked's name to be blotted out — same fate as the erased remembrance of enemies here.

Proverbs 10:7 says the wicked's name rots — parallels the wiped-out remembrance of enemies here.